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Frank Wolf (politician)

U.S. congressman who represented Virginia (born 1939)


U.S. congressman who represented Virginia (born 1939)

FieldValue
nameFrank Wolf
imageFranklinwolf.jpeg
stateVirginia
district
term_startJanuary 3, 1981
term_endJanuary 3, 2015
predecessorJoe Fisher
successorBarbara Comstock
birth_nameFrank Rudolph Wolf
birth_date
birth_placePhiladelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
partyRepublican
spouseCarolyn Stover
children5
educationPennsylvania State University (BA)
Georgetown University (LLB)
branchUnited States Army
unitSignal Corps (Reserve)
serviceyears1962–1963 (active)
1963–1967 (reserve)
module

Georgetown University (LLB) 1963–1967 (reserve) Frank Rudolph Wolf (born January 30, 1939) is an American politician who served as the U.S. representative for from 1981 to 2015. A member of the Republican Party, he announced in December 2013 that he would not seek re-election in 2014. He was succeeded by his former chief of staff and Republican state delegate Barbara Comstock. At the time of his retirement, he was the dean of the state's congressional delegation, having served for 34 consecutive years.

Early life, education and early political career

Born and raised in Philadelphia, Wolf overcame an early speech impediment which caused him to stutter. Attending Pennsylvania State University, he was a member of Alpha Sigma Phi fraternity, received a degree in political science and subsequently earned a law degree from Georgetown University Law Center in Washington, D.C. He then joined the United States Army as a reservist and became a lawyer for the military.

Wolf entered politics in 1968, at the age of 29, when he became a legislative assistant to Edward Biester, the Republican congressman from Pennsylvania's 8th congressional district. From 1971 to 1975, Wolf served as an assistant to Secretary of the Interior Rogers Morton.

U.S. House of Representatives

Elections

During the 1976 presidential election year, Wolf's first campaign for Virginia's 10th congressional district ended with his loss in the Republican primary to Vince Callahan by 45%–42%. Two years later, amidst the 1978 midterm elections, he won the Republican nomination unopposed, but lost the general election to the incumbent Democrat, Joseph L. Fisher, 53%–47%.

Wolf gives remarks during the Ministerial to Advance Religious Freedom at the U.S. Department of State in 2018

In the 1980 House election, when Ronald Reagan's decisive victory in the presidential election brought with it a 34-seat swing in the House, Wolf's third run proved to be successful; he won the Republican primary with 75% of the vote and then defeated Fisher in a rematch, 51%–49%. In the 1982 midterms, Wolf won re-election with 53% of the vote. He would never face another contest anywhere near that close.

Wolf did not face a Democratic opponent in 1994 and 2000, winning both with over 80% of the votes against third-party candidates. After 1982, his closest races were in the Democratic wave elections of 2006 and 2008. On both occasions he defeated professor Judy Feder, by 57%–41% and 59%–39%, respectively. Those were the only occasions after 1982 that he received below 60 percent of the vote.

In the 2012 election, as Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney carried the district by 1%, Wolf was re-elected by 20%. In September 2013, it was announced that Wolf was to be challenged in the 2014 election by Democrat Richard Bolger, a Fairfax attorney and small business owner. In December 2013, Wolf announced his intention to retire from politics, leaving office in January 2015just days before his 76th birthday. He was succeeded by his former aide, Republican State Delegate Barbara Comstock.

Wolf's district was significantly redrawn several times during his 34 years in office. For his first six terms, he represented a compact Northern Virginia-based district covering Fairfax, Arlington, and Loudoun Counties. The 1990 redistricting by a Democratic Virginia General Assembly drew heavily Democratic Arlington County into the neighboring 8th District, while drawing the more Democratic portions of Fairfax County into the new 11th district. To make up for the loss of population, the 10th was pushed to the west and south to encompass parts of the congressional district held by U.S. Rep. George Allen, which was eliminated to create a black-majority district in accordance with the Voting Rights Act. Allen chose not to challenge Wolf, instead running for Governor of Virginia in 1993. The district kept approximately the same composition after the 2000 apportionment by a Republican Virginia General Assembly, but lost territory in the outlying areas of the district to allow for population growth in Fairfax and Loudoun. In 2013, the Fairfax portion of the district held about 40 percent of the population, Loudoun County held 30 percent, and the remainder of the district at 30 percent.

During his final three terms, Wolf was the only Republican representing a district based in the Washington suburbs on either side of the Potomac River. The neighboring 11th district was taken by Democrat Gerry Connolly in 2008, while the last Republican representing a district on the Maryland side, Connie Morella, had been defeated in 2002.

Family and Relatives

In 2022 Wolf's grandson, Caleb Max, ran for his seat in the Republican Firehouse Primary for Virginia's then redistricted 10th Congressional District. Max was eliminated in round 8 of the ranked choice ballet counting which included 11 candidates total.

Tenure

Wolf was especially prominent in three areas: transportation, human rights, and gambling. Before he retired, he was the co-chair of the US Congress Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission, formerly the Human Rights Caucus.

In 2010, the NRA Political Victory Fund gave him a B+ and the American Civil Liberties Union gave him 13%, dropping to 0% in 2011. His pre-2009 ranking from the United States Border Control was 92%.

Human rights

Wolf traveled five times to the Sudan, advocating for relief of the Darfur genocide.{{cite web |access-date=2008-11-05 |archive-date=2021-09-15 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210915194043/https://www.ontheissues.org/va/frank_wolf.htm |url-status=live He has also convened conferences in his district to address human rights issues around the world.

After Iran tried the leadership of the Baháʼí Faith of Iran on February 11, 2009, Wolf voiced his deep concern over the "systematic persecution" of the Baháʼís. On February 13, Wolf offered a resolution on the subject of the Iranian trial, co-sponsored by seven other Congressmen, in H. RES. 175 – "Condemning the Government of Iran for its state-sponsored persecution of its Baháʼí minority and its continued violation of the International Covenants on Human Rights"; the resolution was referred to the Committee on Foreign Affairs. The situation in Iran received international attention, including defense of Iranian Nobel Laureate attorney Shirin Ebadi in June, after she received threats in April warning her against making speeches abroad, including her defending Iran's minority Baháʼí community.

On February 28, 2014, along with the Democrat Jackie Speier, Wolf became the co-chair of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Caucus, a group created in response to the ongoing persecution of Ahmadis. On May 9, 2014, Wolf introduced the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom Reauthorization Act of 2014 (H.R. 4653; 113th Congress), a bill that would amend the International Religious Freedom Act of 1998 to reauthorize the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) as an independent federal government advisory body through FY2019.

China

Wolf has criticized the human rights record of China. He was one of the leading congressman trying to stop the grant of permanent Most Favored Nation (MFN) status to China in 1999. | access-date = 2008-11-05 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20070927004017/http://www.asianresearch.org/articles/1972.html | archive-date = September 27, 2007 | url-status = dead When Wolf and Congressman Chris Smith were in Beijing shortly before the 2008 Summer Olympics, the Chinese security service prevented them from participating in a dinner meeting with local human rights lawyers.{{cite news |author-link=Jim Yardley |access-date=2008-01-22 |archive-date=2013-12-25 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131225114040/http://www.nytimes.com/2008/07/02/world/asia/02beijing.html?scp=1&sq=china+frank+wolf&st=nyt |url-status=live

In the 2011 United States federal budget, Wolf inserted a clause prohibiting NASA and the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy from any joint scientific activity with China for the remainder of the 2011 fiscal year. Wolf remarked, "We don't want to give them the opportunity to take advantage of our technology, and we have nothing to gain from dealing with them. And frankly, it boils down to a moral issue. ... Would you have a bilateral program with Stalin?"

In June 2014, Wolf got House support for an amendment that would rename the street on which the Chinese embassy was located; the amendment would change International Place to Liu Xiaobo Plaza, in honor of Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo.

Iraq War

During the Bush administration, Wolf voted consistently with the President's positions. He voted in favor of military action in Iraq in 2002. He also voted to make the Patriot Act permanent, opposed requiring Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act warrants for wiretaps within the United States, and supported the president in restricting congressional oversight for CIA interrogations.

However, in March 2006, Congress, at Wolf's suggestion by inserting an earmark into a supplemental appropriation bill, and in a breach with the Bush administration, announced the creation of the Iraq Study Group to reassess the U.S. strategy in Iraq.{{cite book |author-link=Michael Barone (pundit) |author2-link=Richard E. Cohen |access-date=2008-01-22 |archive-date=2017-02-02 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170202133158/http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/05/us/politics/05pcong.html?_r=1&oref=slogin |url-status=live

Social issues

Wolf opposes abortion and subsidized birth control for federal employees. As congressman, Wolf also voted to deny funding to Planned Parenthood. He also opposes U.S. funding for international family planning in developing countries. Wolf was one of several Congressmen who spoke against the Uganda anti-gay bill in 2010. He signed a letter supporting the "one man one woman" issue in the Manhattan Declaration. Wolf sponsored the bill that became the District of Columbia Civil Contempt Imprisonment Limitation Act, , in 1989 and supported the bill that became the Elizabeth Morgan Act in 1996.

Gambling

A 2005 Washington Post article cited "opposition to the spread of gambling" as one of Wolf's "central causes". Wolf sought to revise the regulation process for gambling on Native American reservations.

Committee assignments

  • Committee on Appropriations
    • Subcommittee on Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies (chairman)
    • Subcommittee on Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies

Caucus memberships

  • Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission (Co-chair)
  • International Conservation Caucus
  • Sportsmen's Caucus

In the 109th Congress, Wolf was chairman of Subcommittee on Foreign Operations, Export Financing, and Related Programs, and its ranking minority member in the 110th. He was co-chairman of the Congressional Human Rights Caucus with Jim McGovern, who replaced the late Tom Lantos. Wolf is a member of the Moderate Republican Main Street Partnership.

Electoral history

YearRepublicanVotesPctDemocraticVotesPct3rd PartyPartyVotesPct3rd PartyPartyVotesPct
1978Frank Wolf61,98147%Joseph Fisher70,89253%
1980Frank Wolf110,84051%Joseph Fisher105,88349%
1982Frank Wolf86,50653%Ira Lechner75,36146%Scott BowdenIndependent2,1621%
1984Frank Wolf158,52863%John Flannery95,07437%
1986Frank Wolf95,72460%John Milliken63,29240%
1988Frank Wolf188,55068%Robert Weinberg88,28432%
1990Frank Wolf103,76161%N. MacKenzie Canter57,24934%Barbara MinnichIndependent5,2733%
1992Frank Wolf144,47164%Ray Vickery75,77533%Alan OgdenIndependent6,8743%
1994Frank Wolf153,31187%(no candidate)Bob RileeLibertarian8,2675%
1996Frank Wolf169,26672%Robert Weinberg59,14525%Gary ReamsLibertarian59,1453%
1998Frank Wolf103,64872%Cornell Brooks36,47625%Robert BarnettIndependent4,5063%
2000Frank Wolf238,81784%(no candidate)Brian BrownLibertarian28,10710%
2002Frank Wolf115,91772%John Stevens45,46428%
2004Frank Wolf205,98264%James Socas116,65436%
2006Frank Wolf138,21357%Judy Feder98,76941%Wilbur WoodLibertarian2,1071%
2008Frank Wolf223,14059%Judy Feder147,35739%Neeraj NigamIndependent8,4572%
2010Frank Wolf131,11663%Jeff Barnett72,60435%William RedpathLibertarian4,6072%
2012Frank Wolf214,03858%Kristin Cabral142,02439%J. Kevin ChisholmIndependent9,8553%

References

References

  1. [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=msu.31293100838980&view=1up&seq=215&q1=Frank%20Wolf 1981 Official Congressional Directory: 97th Congress]
  2. Press, CQ. (June 2003). "Congressional Staff Directory, Summer 2003: 108th Congress, Second Session: Members, Committees, Staffs, Biographies". [[CQ Press]].
  3. Blake, Aaron. (December 17, 2013). "Rep. Frank Wolf (R-Va.) won't seek reelection". [[The Washington Post]].
  4. Reilly, Mollie. (December 17, 2013). "Frank Wolf, GOP Congressman, Won't Seek Reelection In 2014". The Huffington Post.
  5. (11 November 2009). "Telepractice – Frank Wolf Interview". PresenceTelecare.com.
  6. . (2011). ["Rep. Frank Wolf (R)"](http://www.nationaljournal.com/almanac/2010/person/frank-wolf-va/). *National Journal Group Inc.*.
  7. "November 2008 Official Results". [[Virginia State Board of Elections]].
  8. Trifone, Nicole. (November 7, 2012). "Frank Wolf Wins Re-Election". patch.com.
  9. Cahn, Emily. (6 September 2013). "Frank Wolf Receives Democratic Challenger". RollCall.com.
  10. "GogoBook PDF Magazine".
  11. "Virginia's 10th Congressional District election, 2022".
  12. "About the Committee". Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission.
  13. "Vote Smart - Candidate Ratings".
  14. (2009-02-11). "Iran Continues Systematic Persecution of Baha'is". House of Representatives, Congressional Record.
  15. (2009-02-13). "Condemning the Government of Iran for its state-sponsored persecution of its Baha'i minority and its continued violation of the International Covenants on Human Rights. (Introduced in House)". House of Representatives, Congressional Record.
  16. (2009-02-24). "Local Baha'is worry about their fellow believers in Iran". The Chatham News.
  17. (14 April 2008). "Top Iranian dissident threatened". BBC News.
  18. "H.R. 4653 – Summary". United States Congress.
  19. "China". wolf.house.gov.
  20. Mervis, Jeffrey. (21 April 2011). "Spending Bill Prohibits U.S.-China Collaborations". American Association for the Advancement of Science.
  21. (25 June 2014). "US push to rename Chinese embassy street after dissident". BBC News.
  22. Roach, Erin. (Jan 5, 2010). "Congressmen write letter opposing Uganda anti-gay bill". Baptist Press.
  23. E.J. Dionne Jr.. (March 15, 2005). "Rolling the Dice on a GOP Rift". [[The Washington Post]].
  24. Barr, Andy. "McGovern Replaces Lantos as Human Rights Co-Chair" ([[The Hill (newspaper). The Hill]], June 12, 2008)
  25. "Election Statistics". Office of the Clerk of the House of Representatives.
  26. "Election results". [[Virginia State Board of Elections]].
  27. "November 6, 2012 General Election Official Results". Virginia State Board of Elections.
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